Anger over pupil denied exam

Takunda Maodza Harare Bureau
BELVIN CHIBI, a Form Four pupil at the Catholic Church-run Mweyamutsvene Mission, yesterday missed his third national examination paper after he was again barred from entering the exam room without school shoes.

The pupil has already missed two examinations — English (Paper 1) and Commerce (Paper 2) — after the headmaster’s wife, Nyasha Rubende, barred him from the examination room because he had no school shoes.

Yesterday he did not write English paper 2. Rubende is a teacher at the school where her husband, Abel Zebron Rubende, is the headmaster.

The Catholic Church yesterday expressed shock at the incident amid indications the headmaster had summoned Chibi to his office and offered to pay for him to sit for the June 2016 examinations.

It is understood Abel is also keen to engage the boy’s relatives.

The boy stays with his grandmother in the poverty-stricken Bocha area of Manicaland Province.

Chibi had registered with Zimsec to write five subjects and with three national examinations missed, there is no hope he will sit the remaining subjects.

He narrated his ordeal to our Harare Bureau yesterday.

“I don’t have school shoes and so I borrowed a pair of shoes from a well wisher. It was not a school shoe. As I entered the examination room, Mrs Rubende barred me. I pleaded with her but she wouldn’t listen. I was left with no option save to go back home. I failed to write again today (yesterday),” he said.

Chibi confirmed the headmaster had offered to pay for his June 2016 examinations.

“He (headmaster) said he was going to pay for my examinations in June next year. What pains me is that I had prepared hard for the examinations. I stay with my grandmother,” said a dejected Chibi.

The Catholic Church yesterday said it was disturbed by the incident.

“This is a shocking incident especially considering the fact that most children in rural areas can’t afford to buy shoes and go to school barefoot,” said Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Zimbabwe spokesperson Father Fredrick Chiromba. “There’s also no regulation that students have to wear shoes. In rural areas the majority don’t have shoes. I will need to find out what really happened in this case,” he said.

Rubende refused to comment on the matter yesterday, referring all questions to the district education Office in Mutare. Asked whether it was true that he had offered to pay for Chibi’s June 2016 examinations, he said:

“I don’t know where you’re getting all that information from. Please tell me who is giving you all that information. I’ve given all the information to the district education office in Mutare.”

Efforts to get a comment from the district education office in Mutare were fruitless.

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